Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Auburn advances; missed FTs cost New Mexico State

- AUBURN 78, NEW MEXICO STATE 77

SALT LAKE CITY — A.J. Harris had an easy layup for the tie. He wanted a win for New Mexico State.

It didn’t work out, but boyoh-boy, what a way for the Aggies to go down swinging Thursday against fifth-seeded Auburn in the NCAA Tournament.

With the clock ticking down, Harris passed on an open layup and kicked out to wide-open teammate Terrell Brown, who was spotted up for the game-winner behind the arc. Brown was fouled as he took the shot, but missed two of three free throws with 1.1 seconds left, and New Mexico State fell 78-77.

It’s hard to call the Aggies losers after their showing in the opening round of the Midwest Region, though.

“I can sit up here and second guess,” said New Mexico State Coach Chris Jans, “but if he makes the three, or makes all three free throws, it’s an Ali-Frazier moment.”

Harris said he knew the Aggies were trailing by two as he took the inbounds pass with 6 seconds left, darted up the left side of the court, sped past J’Von McCormick, then got a step on Auburn forward Chuma Okeke.

There was nothing but air between the 5-foot-9 guard and the basket as he made his way through the key.

“Yes, I did, I had an open shot,” Harris said. “But I felt Terrell Brown was going to hit the three.”

He missed, but took a foul from Bryce Brown, who was late getting out to the arc, and clearly as shocked as anyone to see the ball get kicked back out.

“They have a lot of shot-blockers on their team, so I could see why he would kick it out,” Terrell Brown said of his teammate’s decision.

With McCormick making the choke sign as Brown toed the line — “I saw in his face, he was pretty scared,” McCormick said — the junior guard watched his first free throw rim out. He stepped up again and made the second. Then the third one bounced around the iron before bounding out.

Auburn knocked the rebound out of bounds and New Mexico State’s Trevelin Queen had an open look from the wing at the buzzer but shot an air ball.

That huge sigh of relief? It came from Auburn. The Tigers (27-9) led by as many as 13 midway through the second half and McCormick’s three-point play gave Auburn a 73-65 lead with 2:13 left.

It looked like it was time for Auburn to start making plans for Saturday’s second round.

Two turnovers, two missed free throws and two Aggies three-pointers later, the Tigers were fighting for their lives, hoping Brown, a 78 percent free-throw shooter who had more attempts from the line than anyone on his team this season, would miss at least one.

He missed two. “Until you get in that moment, you don’t know how you’re going to react,” Auburn Coach Bruce Pearl said, when asked about the Tiger’s near meltdown.

He found out.

So did New Mexico State. The Aggies shot 952 three-pointers this season — ninth most in the country. And though the result hurt, chances are they’d do the same thing again.

“We’ve got shooters who stay after practice, they work on that shot all the time,” said Aggies forward Johnny McCants. “We had open shots the whole game. We just didn’t get them to fall.”

KANSAS 87, NORTHEASTE­RN 53

SALT LAKE CITY — Dedric Lawson had 25 points and 11 rebounds, and fourth-seeded Kansas dominated inside for a rout of Northeaste­rn.

The Jayhawks (26-9) had a notable size advantage inside and used it, outscoring the Huskies 50-16 in the paint while grabbing 17 more rebounds.

Devon Dotson controlled the offense and scored 18 points, while Dedric’s brother, K.J., chipped in 13 points.

KENTUCKY 79, ABILENE CHRISTIAN 44

JACKSONVIL­LE, Fla. — With PJ Washington watching from the bench in a cast, second-seeded Kentucky romped to a victory over tournament newcomer Abilene Christian.

Keldon Johnson scored 25 points in a huge mismatch that was over by halftime. The Wildcats shot 60 percent in the opening half, held Abilene Christian to 5 of 26 from the field and went to the locker room with a 39-13 lead.

Even without Washington, who sprained his left foot in the SEC Tournament, the Wildcats had far too many weapons for the Southland Conference representa­tive, a No. 15 seed.

Reid Travis added 18 points and Tyler Herro 14.

 ?? AP/JEFF SWINGER ?? Auburn forward Chuma Okeke grabs a rebound against New Mexico State forward Ivan Aurrecoech­ea in the first half Thursday in an NCAA Tournament first-round game in Salt Lake City. Auburn won 78-77.
AP/JEFF SWINGER Auburn forward Chuma Okeke grabs a rebound against New Mexico State forward Ivan Aurrecoech­ea in the first half Thursday in an NCAA Tournament first-round game in Salt Lake City. Auburn won 78-77.

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